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that is not exactly right
if the material that will get out of melting ice is same as water, then you'll be right, but when salt water freezes, the salt will remain in the unfreezed water and the ice will have no salt in it, when melting the ice you'll have water, which has (i don't know what it is called but it is Mass/Volume) less then the sea water, the ice displaces sea water that has the same mass of the ice, when the ice will melt it will still have the same mass , now the question is: which has a bigger volume a certain mass of sea water or the same mass of normal water ??? the answer is normal water has bigger volume, so when the icebergs melts the level of water in the world will get higher

Water has its maximum density at 4 degrees C. Since ice floats in water, it is clearly less dense than the water (salt or otherwise). The iceberg displaces the same Mass of water as itself but some of it (1/6) is sticking out of the water. Thus when the iceberg melts, it will replace its own mass (weight) in water but this will have a greater volume when and if it warms up.

This question only applies to icebergs floating in water. I don't know the exact number, but the majority of fresh water on the planet is located in Antarctica, which is a continent. If all that ice melts, it will flood the planet since it is not displacing any water.

Ur wrong!!!!!!!!!!!!! The ice contains water and so? what if it does expand? It still adds water to the oceans on earth and some of that water must go somewhere like to the equator, expanding in the heat. WATER LEVEL WILL DEFINITLY RISE!!!!!!!